A
History of Injustice
The 1897
Aboriginal Protection Act gave the Queensland Government control over every
aspect of the lives of Indigenous people in the State.
By 1904, the
employment, pay and savings of all Aborigines were controlled through compulsory
work contracts. These often
resulted in children being placed in dormitories so that their parents could be
sent elsewhere to work. Some
children were also made to work.
From 1905 to
1972, a system of “compulsory savings” was introduced for over half of all
Indigenous workers. These workers
had access to only a small fraction of their wages.
They often had to ask local police for some of their wages to pay for
basic expenses.
The remainder of
their wages was placed in the Queensland Aboriginals Account
It is estimated that this fund amassed around $500 million.
Workers were not
given a written record of their pay and research has uncovered much negligent
recording, mismanagement and fraudulent use of funds held in trust.
Some of the
trust funds were used to pay for public hospitals and other infrastructure.
Government
Response
In
1996, the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC) ruled that the
Queensland Government had underpaid Indigenous workers in the 11 years from 1975
when the Racial Discrimination Act came into effect.
In response, the Government paid $7000 each to affected workers as
compensation. It is estimated that
Indigenous workers were underpaid $187 million during this period, but only $40
million was paid out through this compensation package.
In 2002, the
Queensland Government recognised the great wrong done to Indigenous workers over
the twentieth century and introduced a $56.5 million reparations package.
It offered payments of $2000 or $4000 to eligible workers.
The payment was not made available to the families of deceased workers
and those workers who accepted the payment had to indemnify the Government
against legal action to claim the full amount owed.
This offer closed on 31 January this year.
Only a fraction
of the $56.5 million package has been paid out and many Indigenous people are
unhappy about the terms of the package. They
want to keep working for a fairer outcome.
The
Church Calls for Justice
Various
diocesan bodies in Queensland (such as the Catholic
Justice and Peace Commission of Brisbane and the Social
Justice Commission of Toowoomba) have prepared a petition to the Premier
calling on him to re-negotiate a fairer and more just settlement of this issue
with Indigenous people.
You
can read more about this issue in a background paper prepared by the Australian
Catholic Social Justice Council. It
is called Stolen Wages: An Opportunity for Justice.
It can be downloaded from their website at http://www.socialjustice.catholic.org.au/
You
are urged to participate in this call for justice by signing
the petition and getting others to sign it too.
If
you need more information or help, please contact:
Catholic
Justice and Peace Commission of Brisbane,
GPO Box 282,
Brisbane Q 4001.
Ph
(07) 3336 9173, Fax (07) 3336 9177, E-mail: arndtp@bne.catholic.net.au/